Thanksgiving Books For Kids

Thanksgiving is on it’s way even if you ( ok me) still have a few Halloween decorations to take down and pack up. Here are our favorite Thanksgiving books for kids.

A Plump and Perky Turkey by Teresa Bateman is such a cute and funny book about a town that needs a turkey and the hilarious lengths they go to to find one. The town is sadly outwitted by the turkey and end up eating shredded wheat for thanksgiving. The illustrations kept my little man interested when he was a toddler but he only started understanding the dark humor at around 4. I love this book because of the humor makes me giggle. My son was a little off put by the idea of the towns folk eating the turkey and was relived when he escaped before they shoved him in the oven. I like that he is starting to understand that the meat he eats is actually a cooked animal, we take that for granted but for many young kids this is a huge realization!

10 Fat Turkeys by Tony Johnston was a classroom favorite, it”™s about as silly as a book gets and the kids had no clue they were actually learning about subtraction while listening to the crazy rhymes. This won”™t explain the pilgrims , or talk about the Mayflower, but it will make your kids laugh! Very cute!

This First Thanksgiving Day: A Counting Story by Laura Krauss Melmed is a stunning gem of a book. I can”™t believe I haven”™t read it before, normally great books like this go through teaching circles like wildfire. The book has so many layers it will keep toddlers and preschoolers alike busy and engaged. The text explains the first Thanksgiving while counting 1-10 in rhyming poetry and the illustrations by Mark Buehner have hidden treasures, see if you can find them! After I return this to the library, I will be buying it for sure!

Thanksgiving on Thursday (Magic Tree House #27) by Mary Pope Osborne is part of the Magic Treehouse series which I simply can not say enough good things about. My son started reading them this summer and each time I go to the library ( and I am there a lot) I check to see if they have any books in the series we haven’t read yet. This one though I got for my son when I was at the Scholastic store in NYC. Thanksgiving is special for my son since he was born on Thanksgiving and I wanted him to have this one to keep. If you aren’t familiar with this series Jack and Annie are the time traveling siblings that go back in time to gather objects to help their magical librarian friend Morgan. My son is a history buff and these books have fueled that on his level so beautifully. In this book they travel back in time to the first Thanksgiving and despite thinking that they wrecked everything the message that it’s the friends at the table not the food on it that matters shines through.

Twas The Night Before Thanksgiving by Dav Pilkey was such a treat to read. It”™s a reworking of the classic Christmas poem, with a Thanksgiving twist. A bus full of kids head off to the turkey farm the day before Thanksgiving and are immediately enamored with the birds. When a child asks the farmer what the axe by the door is for”¦ well let”™s just say the truth is told and the kids fall apart. They don”™t stay down for long though, the kids outsmart the farmer and their teacher to save the turkeys from the axe. Somehow the author finds a way to make the possible slaughter of these happy friendly, named turkey”™s funny. My son was giggling while I was kinda nervous that they”™d get the axe! Great rhymes throughout this hilarious book!

Thanksgiving at the Tappletons’ by Eileen Spinelli is a really cute story that offers many opportunities for parents to talk about lying, disappointment and what really matters at Thanksgiving. The Tappleton’s Thanksgiving dinner is doomed, first the turkey falls in the pond, then there are no pies left at the bakery and then continues to get worse. No one wants to be the person to ruin the holiday dinner and keeps it a secret that the part of the meal that was their responsibility is ruined. Of course this means they end up eating liverwurst and pickles for dinner but Grandma saves Thanksgiving by reminding them all that it doesn’t matter what they are eating but who they are eating with.

Thanksgiving on Plymouth Plantation (Time-Traveling Twins) by Diane Stanley . I can”™t say enough good things about this book, but I will try. The story starts with a time traveling grandmother who takes her grand kids back to the Plymouth plantation days before what is often called the 1st Thanksgiving. My son was hooked on this book with the revelation of the time traveling and I loved that it put all the common myths surrounding Thanksgiving and the pilgrims to the forefront and included the true history without wrecking any cherished views of this beloved holiday. The book is long as it should be in order to go into the depth of what life was like for the Pilgrims and how they learned with help of the local Native Americans how to survive in this new land. While reading it to my son I was so happy to hear him say ” I learned that today , that”™s in my book!” to many of the text. I am buying this book tonight, and returning it to the library in hope of many other families being able to read and love it as much as we did.

Thanksgiving Treat by Catherine Stock is a really heart warming book that will take you back to family gatherings of your childhood. The story follows the Thanksgiving day preparations of an extended family and one little boy who just wants to help. He goes from one job to the next where he is always told he is too little, or it”™s too dangerous for him to do, and he should go somewhere else. Finally his Grandpa steps in with a very important job and the sad little boy is given new hope to be helpful. I remember being too little, and I know that from time to time my son is told he is too little too, this book is a kind reminder of finding ways to make even our littlest family members feel important and included. My son really liked it as well, while reading it today he stopped me and listed some of the things he is still too little to do, and the things that he has recently been able to do independently. Great book to sit down and talk about with your child.

Thanksgiving Is for Giving Thanks by Margaret Sutherland is book that explains what Thanksgiving is, and gives lots of examples of things to be thankful for. I like this book although I could go without the page where the narrator is thankful for lollipops, all the other things are wonderful like a teacher”™s encouragement, grandma”™s hugs, and sunny days and to me the lollipops sorta fall flat. Easily skipped over if you are not keen on it but the book as a whole is valuable teaching tool about thanksgiving. * Edited 2012 Both my kids love this book and I have no clue why I was so uptight about the lollipops reference?! I have chilled out as a mom I guess. Both my kids list what we think of as little things like lollipops on their things to be thankful for and that’s great . As a parent I just want them to be appreciative of things even if lollipops are lumped in with bedtime snuggles and family time.

I love your list! I recently realized that we have absolutely no Thanksgiving books – will have to remedy that for next year and your list will help. What ages do you think Thanksgiving on Plymouth Plantation is best suited for?

These are good. There’s also a new children’s picture out called Ten Thankful Turkeys that my kids enjoyed. It’s about how turkeys celebrate which is very similiar to how we celebrate (minus the turkey as the main course). 🙂

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